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27 new typefaces released last month that you need to know about

Anyone who’s ever tried their hand at designing a typeface will know that it’s a wildly difficult process, and to actually come out at the end with something beautiful takes an extreme amount of skill, taste and patience.

Type design isn’t meant for everyone, but typography is, and nearly every designer works with it every day. This is exactly why we’ve teamed up with Type Release creator Sean Mitchell to share with you some of the latest typefaces released this past month. These are his findings:

Trim

Created by Göran Söderström of Letters from Sweden

Knud V. Engelhardt (1882-1931) was an architect, printer and designer from the country of our laid back neighbours, Denmark. Knud’s characteristic letter forms have already made a strong impression on some modern typefaces. Most notably is probably Skilt Gothic by a fellow Swedish compatriot, where Knuds way of trimming the diagonal stems is one of the spices used to give the typeface its character.

Fighting against the desire to make something similar, this new typeface instead takes the concept to a whole new level by trimming not only diagonals, but all possible letters!

The result is something – different. Trim comes in a large family including manually hinted webfonts and high quality desktop fonts. Some are fat, some are skinny and some are just lagom.

Colfax

Created by Eric Olson of Process Type Foundry

A refined oval sans serif of 20th century origins and 21st century sensibilities. Influences ranging from the gruff Aurora Grotesk series to the elegant Neuzeit are paired with a subtle geometry and typographic utility to inform this family of sans serifs.

Tablet Gothic

Created by José Scaglione and Veronika Burian of Type Together

Originally engineered as a titling type family, meant to help designers working on publications that require output as hard copies and a variety of digital platforms at the same time. As such, it is a grotesque sans serif that looks to the future of publishing with a clear understanding of its history, and reminiscences that go back to nineteenth century Britain and Germany. Tablet Gothic delivers the sturdy, straightforward and clean appearance expected from a grotesque, but it allows itself a good measure of personality to make it stand out on the page.

Adelle Sans

Created by Adelle Sans José Scaglione and Veronika Burian of Type Together

This sans serif counterpart to the award-winning Adelle type family proposes a cleaner and more spirited take on the traditional grotesque sans. As typical with TypeTogether fonts, the most demanding editorial design pieces were taken into consideration when engineering Adelle Sans. The combination of its lively character and unobstrusive appearance that is inherent to grotesque sans serifs make it an utterly versatile tool for any imaginable graphic application, whether it is branding, signage or advertising. Without any doubt, the key word behind Adelle Sans’ design is flexibility.

Novel Sans Rounded

Created by Christoph Dunst of Atlas

This soft humanist sans serif has a carefully attuned character design and a well balanced weight contrast. Having no inktraps the typeface works perfect in reading sizes as well as for display purposes. Many similarities with the other members of the Novel Typeface Family enable designers to combine the four families and reach highest quality in complex typography for both editorial and brand typography.

Novel Sans Rounded Pro comes in 6 weights and contains small caps, an extra set of alternate glyphs, many ligatures, lining figures, hanging figures, small caps figures, positive and negative circled figures for upper and lower case, superior and inferior figures, fractions, extensive language support, arrows for uppercase and lowercase and many more OpenType features.

Henriette

The redefinition of a classic. In the 1920s the Viennese government decided to standardize the street signs across the city. A typeface was especially constructed for the purpose. It was available in a Heavy and a Bold Condensed version, to support short street names as well as longer ones. As the years went by, the typeface was adopted and redrawn by several enamel factories. These adaptations lead to variations on the design, and to the fact that there isn’t a Viennese street sign font but 16 – in part severely – different versions. Henriette is not a digitization of any of those versions; rather, it is influenced by all of them.

Magallanes

Created by Daniel Hernández of Latinotype

Say hello to the new Magallanes Family, designed by Daniel Hernández, a contemporary neo humanist sans serif font. Its strokes and terminals are related to the calligraphic strokes from humanist typefaces. It comes with 8 styles, from Ultra Light to Black, each with its true italics. Every weight comes with alternative glyphs for a more dynamic use. Magallanes is the perfect titling font to complement text faces in magazines, logotypes, etc.

Tikal Sans

Created by Miguel Hernández of Latinotype

A bloody Mayan ritual with no reading sacrifice. Tikal Sans is a glyphic family of twenty weights Mayan inspired designed for Text and Display sizes. The Details curved terminating strokes ended in sharp edges inspired in the ‘virgula’ Mayan glyph that means ‘the spoken word’. Tikal is also known for being the largest city of the Mayan Classic Period and his name means “Lugar de Las Voces” (place of voices). With a contemporary large x-height with OpenType contextual alternate letters offers a functional look with a friendly touch. The Thin and Black weights are great performers in display sizes the light, regular and medium weights are well suited to longer texts.

Alright Sans Web

Created by Jackson Cavanaugh of Okay Type

With Alright Sans, Jackson Cavanaugh set out to create a typeface with simple details and a warm underlying structure. Combining elements of the classic grotesque and humanist sans resulted in a straight-forward workhorse with an affable personality.

Girga

Created by Dino dos Santos and Pedro Leai of DSType

Triumphant, vigorous and strong. These were the keywords for the design of Girga, named after an Egyptian city in the Sohag Governorate. The power and strength of the Egyptian letterforms were balance with a few sans serif forms so the darkness of the text and the fatness of the overall glyphs could be kept.

Greta Sans

Created by Typotheque

Greta explores a multidimensional continuum of possibilities, going beyond the relationship between weight and width, dissolving the boundaries between display and text typefaces. It is a powerful toolbox capable of dealing with the most complex typographical situations.

Geneo

Created by Stéphane Elbaz of Typofonderie

A synthesis of historic and present-day visions of typography, a slab serif constructed on an oblique axis. Its subtle contrast evokes both Renaissance elegance and the robustness of the Egyptian typefaces that were in vogue during the 19th century.

Geneo falls halfway between the classic styles of Garamond and Fournier, with aspects of contemporary slab serifs like Rockwell, Boton, and even Le Monde Courrier. From this blend of styles and genres, it emerges with a singular identity perfectly suited for modern illustrations of quality, savoir-faire, and culture.

Comalle

Created by Juan Pablo De Gregorio of Sudtipos

An organic typeface that rescues some elements of handwritten script, but its stroke does not necessarily answer to a literal calligraphy structure.

So Comalle could produce a powerful impact on the page, it was designed with thicker strokes than its counter forms. The objective is that the black of the letter fills the page and causes a fastest visual impact than typographies that balance blacks and whites.

YWFT Nim

Created by Jackkrit Anantakul of YouWorkForThem

All about layering. Bevel effects, outline effects, 3d effects, shadow effects-all are possible and uniquely powerful with YWFT Nim, making for a near-infinite amount of variety and style. Modern and clean, with a nod to architectural forms and figures, YWFT Nim is ideal for striking headlines and posters, and declarative of a strong, individual functionality.

FF Tisa Sans

Created by Mitja Miklavčič of FontFont

FF Tisa Sans is Slovenian designer Mitja Miklavčič’s follow-up typeface to FF Tisa. Whether used together or separately, both of his families are excellent choices for branding projects and complex editorial applications. The original FF Tisa is one of the new-millennium favorites in the FontFont library. Upon its release, the typeface found its niche with print designers. But FF Tisa Web was a quick hit, too, and became a go-to selection for web designers the world over.

Despite its cross-media appeal, Miklavčič originally drew FF Tisa to meet the technological and aesthetic requirements of contemporary magazine design and printing. His primary goal was to develop a softer, more dynamic take on the nineteenth-century slab serif wood type genre. A large x-height and pronounced serifs help make FF Tisa extremely legible in text sizes. A few unique details-including slightly exaggerated ink traps and a fairly upright italic-are particularly visible in display sizes.

FF Scuba

Created by Felix Braden of FontFont

A readable contemporary sans, with a distinctive character. The initial concept for the family emerged during designer Felix Braden’s search for an offline companion for the Verdana typeface. After he couldn’t find the exact tone that he was looking for, he set off on the development of a new series of types.

Keepsake

Logomotion

Created by TipoType

A typeface specially designed for logotypes, but can also be used in headlines, posters & signage. It has many OpenType feature programming, that give a more playful and rhythmic spirit, creating an interesting geometric-sans and script mix.

Gemma

Created by Mota Italic

Gemma wants to be your best friend. Like best friends, she’s there for you for you when you need her. When you have some complex typographic situations she provides an extensive and impeccably crafted range of characters and styles. When you want to kick back she’s also ready to party with loads of fun additions.

Quatro Sans

Created by Mark Caneso of p.s.type

An undeniably modern typeface with construction principles that attempt to find the balance between machine and hand. The result is a typeface that could find its way into various design situations and feel right at home in them all.